At the 2013 Laser Standard Men’s World Championships, organised by the Ministry of Sports Affairs and Oman Sail, a star studded international line up looks set as the 50 day countdown to the 16 November start of the event in Oman begins.

Western Australia Laser Dinghy Championship 2013. Most classes go through participation ebbs and flows, in the WA dinghy sailing scene but the Laser class attracts strong numbers year after year. Despite being an old design the boats simplicity, affordability, convenience, accessibility and ability to cater for such a diverse range of ages, and shapes and sizes makes it a modern day classic.

Gosford Sailing Club’s Tom Burton, currently the No. 1 ranked International Laser sailor in the world, heads a fleet of 139 boats heading for the Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania to the contest the Audi Laser Australian championships on Hobart’s River Derwent from 28 December to 4 January.

Burton was the training partner for gold medallist and world champion (and fellow GSC member) Tom Slingsby in the lead-up to the London 2012 Olympics and has maintained his form back in Australia this summer. Slingsby has presently moved on to other classes, including the America’s Cup and foiler Moths and is not expected to announce his Brazil 2016 plans for some time..

Burton won Laser men’s division of the ISAF World Sailing Cup at Sail Melbourne and followed this with a close second to New Zealander Sam Meech at Sail Melbourne. At Sail Sydney, Burton won three of the ten races as did Meech, but the Kiwi was more consistent overall.

The Australian championships comprise the three Laser divisions – Standard Rig, Radial and 4.7 and within those groups there will be youth, women and masters champions racing for the much coveted Laser cubes, the traditional trophies for the class.

The entries include sailors from Singapore, Switzerland and Finland. The championships open on Friday, 28 December with competition starting on Saturday, 29 December.

With 71 entries, the Radial fleet is the biggest with a strong line-up of women sailors as the Radial is women’s Olympic single-handed class.

There is a great depth of talent among the mainly young women and teenage boys and girls in the Laser Radial class, headed by World champion Mark Spearman from WA, and Queenslander Ashley Stoddart, who was the topscoring woman at Sail Sydney,

Among the men sailors expected to sail well in the Radials is Tasmanian Rohan Langford who sailed impressively at Sail Melbourne, Christopher Anderson from NSW and Ryan Palk from Queenslander.

While Ashley Stoddart has been the outstanding woman sailor this summer, other than Olympian Krystal Weir, who is not competing in Hobart, there are many talented young women in the fleet, including Queenslanders Louise Evans and Madison Kennedy, Victorians Anna Philp and Natasha Van Rennes, Tasmanians Sophie Chesterman and Anna Vaughan, and the Swiss sailor Manon Luther.

A fleet of 39 boats will line up in the Laser 4.7 class, with a mix of boys and girls. Australian champion Jack Felsenthal has shown his skill with an outstanding win at the Audi Showdown on the Derwent in early November. He followed this up with an impressive regatta at Sail Melbourne.

Felsenthal did not compete at Sail Sydney but the top placegetters there, Victorians Sam Hannah, West Australian Conor Nicholas and Brodie Crossman from NSW should give him plenty of competition in the Nationals, along with Tasmanians Gabriel Morrison and Ed Hargreaves.

Many of the teenage sailors competing the Laser Radial and 4.7 divisions are expected to remain in Hobart to contest the OAMPS Australian Youth Championships which follow the Laser Nationals, also at the RYCT.